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<h3>CHAPTER XXXI. Mr Broune Has Made up His Mind</h3>
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<br/>"And now I have something to say to you." Mr Broune as he
thus spoke to Lady Carbury rose up to his feet and then sat down
again. There was an air of perturbation about him which was
very manifest to the lady, and the cause and coming result of which
she thought that she understood. "The susceptible old goose is
going to do something highly ridiculous and very disagreeable."
It was thus that she spoke to herself of the scene that she saw was
prepared for her, but she did not foresee accurately the shape in
which the susceptibility of the "old goose" would declare
itself. "Lady Carbury," said Mr Broune, standing up a second
time, "we are neither of us so young as we used to be."
<br/>"No, indeed;—and therefore it is that we can afford to ourselves
the luxury of being friends. Nothing but age enables men and
women to know each other intimately."
<br/>This speech was a great impediment to Mr Broune's progress.
It was evidently intended to imply that he at least had reached a
time of life at which any allusion to love would be absurd. And
yet, as a fact, he was nearer fifty than sixty, was young of his age,
could walk his four or five miles pleasantly, could ride his cob in
the park with as free an air as any man of forty, and could
afterwards work through four or five hours of the night with an easy
steadiness which nothing but sound health could produce. Mr
Broune, thinking of himself and his own circumstances, could see no
reason why he should not be in love. "I hope we know each other
intimately at any rate," he said somewhat lamely.
<br/>"Oh, yes;—and it is for that reason that I have come to you for
advice. Had I been a young woman I should not have dared to ask
you."
<br/>"I don't see that. I don't quite understand that. But
it has nothing to do with my present purpose. When I said that
we were neither of us so young as we once were, I uttered what was a
stupid platitude,—a foolish truism."
<br/>"I do not think so," said Lady Carbury smiling.
<br/>"Or would have been, only that I intended something
further." Mr Broune had got himself into a difficulty and
hardly knew how to get out of it. "I was going on to say that I
hoped we were not too old to—love."
<br/>Foolish old darling! What did he mean by making such an ass
of himself? This was worse even than the kiss, as being more
troublesome and less easily pushed on one side and forgotten.
It may serve to explain the condition of Lady Carbury's mind at the
time if it be stated that she did not even at this moment suppose
that the editor of the "Morning Breakfast Table" intended to make her
an offer of marriage. She knew, or thought she knew, that
middle-aged men are fond of prating about love, and getting up
sensational scenes. The falseness of the thing, and the injury
which may come of it, did not shock her at all. Had she known
that the editor professed to be in love with some lady in the next
street, she would have been quite ready to enlist the lady in the
next street among her friends that she might thus strengthen her own
influence with Mr Broune. For herself such make-believe of an
improper passion would be inconvenient, and therefore to be
avoided. But that any man, placed as Mr Broune was in the
world,—blessed with power, with a large income, with influence
throughout all the world around him, courted, fêted, feared and
almost worshipped,—that he should desire to share her fortunes, her
misfortunes, her struggles, her poverty and her obscurity, was not
within the scope of her imagination. There was a homage in it,
of which she did not believe any man to be capable,—and which to her
would be the more wonderful as being paid to herself. She
thought so badly of men and women generally, and of Mr Broune and
herself as a man and a woman individually, that she was unable to
conceive the possibility of such a sacrifice. "Mr Broune," she
said, "I did not think that you would take advantage of the
confidence I have placed in you to annoy me in this way."
<br/>"To annoy you, Lady Carbury! The phrase at any rate is
singular. After much thought I have determined to ask you to be
my wife. That I should be—annoyed, and more than annoyed by
your refusal, is a matter of course. That I ought to expect
such annoyance is perhaps too true. But you can extricate
yourself from the dilemma only too easily."
<br/>The word "wife" came upon her like a thunder-clap. It at
once changed all her feelings towards him. She did not dream of
loving him. She felt sure that she never could love him.
Had it been on the cards with her to love any man as a lover, it
would have been some handsome spendthrift who would have hung from
her neck like a nether millstone. This man was a friend to be
used,—to be used because he knew the world. And now he gave her
this clear testimony that he knew as little of the world as any other
man. Mr Broune of the "Daily Breakfast Table" asking her to be
his wife! But mixed with her other feelings there was a
tenderness which brought back some memory of her distant youth, and
almost made her weep. That a man,—such a man,—should offer to
take half her burdens, and to confer upon her half his
blessings! What an idiot! But what a god! She had
looked upon the man as all intellect, alloyed perhaps by some
passionless remnants of the vices of his youth; and now she found
that he not only had a human heart in his bosom, but a heart that she
could touch. How wonderfully sweet! How infinitely small!
<br/>It was necessary that she should answer him;—and to her it was
only natural that she should think what answer would best assist her
own views without reference to his. It did not occur to her
that she could love him; but it did occur to her that he might lift
her out of her difficulties. What a benefit it would be to her
to have a father, and such a father, for Felix! How easy would
be a literary career to the wife of the editor of the "Morning
Breakfast Table!" And then it passed through her mind that
somebody had told her that the man was paid £3,000 a year for his
work. Would not the world, or any part of it that was
desirable, come to her drawing-room if she were the wife of Mr
Broune? It all passed through her brain at once during that
minute of silence which she allowed herself after the declaration was
made to her. But other ideas and other feelings were present to
her also. Perhaps the truest aspiration of her heart had been
the love of freedom which the tyranny of her late husband had
engendered. Once she had fled from that tyranny and had been
almost crushed by the censure to which she had been subjected.
Then her husband's protection and his tyranny had been restored to
her.
<br/>After that the freedom had come. It had been accompanied by
many hopes never as yet fulfilled, and embittered by many sorrows
which had been always present to her; but still the hopes were alive
and the remembrance of the tyranny was very clear to her. At
last the minute was over and she was bound to speak. "Mr
Broune," she said, "you have quite taken away my breath. I
never expected anything of this kind."
<br/>And now Mr Broune's mouth was opened, and his voice was
free. "Lady Carbury," he said, "I have lived a long time
without marrying, and I have sometimes thought that it would be
better for me to go on the same way to the end. I have worked
so hard all my life that when I was young I had no time to think of
love. And, as I have gone on, my mind has been so fully
employed, that I have hardly realized the want which nevertheless I
have felt. And so it has been with me till I fancied, not that
I was too old for love, but that others would think me so. Then
I met you. As I said at first, perhaps with scant gallantry,
you also are not as young as you once were. But you keep the
beauty of your youth, and the energy, and something of the freshness
of a young heart. And I have come to love you. I speak
with absolute frankness, risking your anger. I have doubted
much before I resolved upon this. It is so hard to know the
nature of another person. But I think I understand yours;—and
if you can confide your happiness with me, I am prepared to entrust
mine to your keeping." Poor Mr Broune! Though endowed
with gifts peculiarly adapted for the editing of a daily newspaper,
he could have had but little capacity for reading a woman's character
when he talked of the freshness of Lady Carbury's young mind!
And he must have surely been much blinded by love, before convincing
himself that he could trust his happiness to such keeping.
<br/>"You do me infinite honour. You pay me a great compliment,"
ejaculated Lady Carbury.
<br/>"Well?"
<br/>"How am I to answer you at a moment? I expected nothing of
this. As God is to be my judge it has come upon me like a
dream. I look upon your position as almost the highest in
England,—on your prosperity as the uttermost that can be achieved."
<br/>"That prosperity, such as it is, I desire most anxiously to share
with you."
<br/>"You tell me so;—but I can hardly yet believe it. And then
how am I to know my own feelings so suddenly? Marriage as I
have found it, Mr Broune, has not been happy. I have suffered
much. I have been wounded in every joint, hurt in every
nerve,—tortured till I could hardly endure my punishment. At
last I got my liberty, and to that I have looked for happiness."
<br/>"Has it made you happy?"
<br/>"It has made me less wretched. And there is so much to be
considered! I have a son and a daughter, Mr Broune."
<br/>"Your daughter I can love as my own. I think I prove my
devotion to you when I say that I am willing for your sake to
encounter the troubles which may attend your son's future career."
<br/>"Mr Broune, I love him better,—always shall love him
better,—than anything in the world." This was calculated to
damp the lover's ardour, but he probably reflected that should he now
be successful, time might probably change the feeling which had just
been expressed. "Mr Broune," she said, "I am now so agitated
that you had better leave me. And it is very late. The
servant is sitting up, and will wonder that you should remain.
It is near two o'clock."
<br/>"When may I hope for an answer?"
<br/>"You shall not be kept waiting. I will write to you, almost
at once. I will write to you,—to-morrow; say the day after
to-morrow, on Thursday. I feel that I ought to have been
prepared with an answer; but I am so surprised that I have none
ready." He took her hand in his, and kissing it, left her
without another word.
<br/>As he was about to open the front door to let himself out, a key
from the other side raised the latch, and Sir Felix, returning from
his club, entered his mother's house. The young man looked up
into Mr Broune's face with mingled impudence and surprise.
"Halloo, old fellow," he said, "you've been keeping it up late here;
haven't you?" He was nearly drunk, and Mr Broune, perceiving
his condition, passed him without a word. Lady Carbury was
still standing in the drawing-room, struck with amazement at the
scene which had just passed, full of doubt as to her future conduct,
when she heard her son tumbling up the stairs. It was
impossible for her not to go out to him. "Felix," she said,
"why do you make so much noise as you come in?"
<br/>"Noish! I'm not making any noish. I think I'm very
early. Your people's only just gone. I shaw shat editor
fellow at the door that won't call himself Brown. He'sh great
ass'h, that fellow. All right, mother. Oh, ye'sh, I'm all
right." And so he tumbled up to bed, and his mother followed
him to see that the candle was at any rate placed squarely on the
table, beyond the reach of the bed curtains.
<br/>Mr Broune as he walked to his newspaper office experienced all
those pangs of doubt which a man feels when he has just done that
which for days and weeks past he has almost resolved that he had
better leave undone. That last apparition which he had
encountered at his lady love's door certainly had not tended to
reassure him. What curse can be much greater than that
inflicted by a drunken, reprobate son? The evil, when in the
course of things it comes upon a man, has to be borne; but why should
a man in middle life unnecessarily afflict himself with so terrible a
misfortune? The woman, too, was devoted to the cub! Then
thousands of other thoughts crowded upon him. How would this
new life suit him? He must have a new house, and new ways; must
live under a new dominion, and fit himself to new pleasures.
And what was he to gain by it? Lady Carbury was a handsome
woman, and he liked her beauty. He regarded her too as a clever
woman; and, because she had flattered him, he had liked her
conversation. He had been long enough about town to have known
better,—and as he now walked along the streets, he almost felt that
he ought to have known better. Every now and again he warmed
himself a little with the remembrance of her beauty, and told himself
that his new home would be pleasanter, though it might perhaps be
less free, than the old one. He tried to make the best of it;
but as he did so was always repressed by the memory of the appearance
of that drunken young baronet.
<br/>Whether for good or for evil, the step had been taken and the
thing was done. It did not occur to him that the lady would
refuse him. All his experience of the world was against such
refusal. Towns which consider, always render themselves.
Ladies who doubt always solve their doubts in the one
direction. Of course she would accept him;—and of course he
would stand to his guns. As he went to his work he endeavoured
to bathe himself in self-complacency; but, at the bottom of it, there
was a substratum of melancholy which leavened his prospects.
<br/>Lady Carbury went from the door of her son's room to her own
chamber, and there sat thinking through the greater part of the
night. During these hours she perhaps became a better woman, as
being more oblivious of herself, than she had been for many a
year. It could not be for the good of this man that he should
marry her,—and she did in the midst of her many troubles try to
think of the man's condition. Although in the moments of her
triumph,—and such moments were many,—she would buoy herself up with
assurances that her Felix would become a rich man, brilliant with
wealth and rank, an honour to her, a personage whose society would be
desired by many, still in her heart of hearts she knew how great was
the peril, and in her imagination she could foresee the nature of the
catastrophe which might come. He would go utterly to the dogs
and would take her with him. And whithersoever he might go, to
what lowest canine regions he might descend, she knew herself well
enough to be sure that whether married or single she would go with
him. Though her reason might be ever so strong in bidding her
to desert him, her heart, she knew, would be stronger than her
reason. He was the one thing in the world that overpowered
her. In all other matters she could scheme, and contrive, and
pretend; could get the better of her feelings and fight the world
with a double face, laughing at illusions and telling herself that
passions and preferences were simply weapons to be used. But
her love for her son mastered her,—and she knew it. As it was
so, could it be fit that she should marry another man?
<br/>And then her liberty! Even though Felix should bring her to
utter ruin, nevertheless she would be and might remain a free
woman. Should the worse come to the worst she thought that she
could endure a Bohemian life in which, should all her means have been
taken from her, she could live on what she earned. Though Felix
was a tyrant after a kind, he was not a tyrant who could bid her do
this or that. A repetition of marriage vows did not of itself
recommend itself to her. As to loving the man, liking his
caresses, and being specially happy because he was near her,—no
romance of that kind ever presented itself to her imagination.
How would it affect Felix and her together,—and Mr Broune as
connected with her and Felix? If Felix should go to the dogs,
then would Mr Broune not want her. Should Felix go to the stars
instead of the dogs, and become one of the gilded ornaments of the
metropolis, then would not he and she want Mr Broune. It was
thus that she regarded the matter.
<br/>She thought very little of her daughter as she considered all
this. There was a home for Hetta, with every comfort, if Hetta
would only condescend to accept it. Why did not Hetta marry her
cousin Roger Carbury and let there be an end of that trouble?
Of course Hetta must live wherever her mother lived till she should
marry; but Hetta's life was so much at her own disposal that her
mother did not feel herself bound to be guided in the great matter by
Hetta's predispositions.
<br/>But she must tell Hetta should she ultimately make up her mind to
marry the man, and in that case the sooner this was done the
better. On that night she did not make up her mind. Ever
and again as she declared to herself that she would not marry him,
the picture of a comfortable assured home over her head, and the
conviction that the editor of the "Morning Breakfast Table" would be
powerful for all things, brought new doubts to her mind. But
she could not convince herself, and when at last she went to her bed
her mind was still vacillating. The next morning she met Hetta
at breakfast, and with assumed nonchalance asked a question about the
man who was perhaps about to be her husband. "Do you like Mr
Broune, Hetta?"
<br/>"Yes;—pretty well. I don't care very much about him.
What makes you ask, mamma?"
<br/>"Because among my acquaintances in London there is no one so truly
kind to me as he is."
<br/>"He always seems to me to like to have his own way."
<br/>"Why shouldn't he like it?"
<br/>"He has to me that air of selfishness which is so very common with
people in London;—as though what he said were all said out of
surface politeness."
<br/>"I wonder what you expect, Hetta, when you talk of London
people? Why should not London people be as kind as other
people? I think Mr Broune is as obliging a man as any one I
know. But if I like anybody, you always make little of
him. The only person you seem to think well of is Mr Montague."
<br/>"Mamma, that is unfair and unkind. I never mention Mr
Montague's name if I can help it,—and I should not have spoken of Mr
Broune, had you not asked me."
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